(In)appropriate Personal Pronoun Use in Political
Science
A
Qualitative Study and a Proposed Heuristic for Future
Research
Nigel
Harwood
This
article describes five political scientists’ interview-based accounts of
appropriate and inappropriate use of the pronouns I
and
we
in
academic writing. The informants talked about pronoun use with reference to one
of their own journal articles and also by referring to other informants’ texts.
Beliefs about appropriate and inappropriate use varied widely, and it was
emphasized that the discipline encompasses a number of subdisciplines, which helps account for these differing
pronoun preferences. The insights and implications of the study are discussed,
and a heuristic that combines corpus-based and interview-based approaches to the
investigation of pronouns is proposed. The corpus-based part of the heuristic
provides the researcher with data on typical disciplinary patterns of pronoun
use, whereas the interview-based part provides accounts of informants’
motivations and intentions that inform their pronoun use. It is argued that the
heuristic could be adapted to investigate other linguistic features in academic
writing.
[This article appears in Written Communication 23(4),
2006]